Honey plants is a large group of angiosperm plants from which the bees collect nectar and pollen, food supply of beekeeping. Producing nectar nectaries are in the form of flat points, bumps, grooves, often located deep in flowers, and sometimes they are hidden in special thickening of sepals or petals. Nectaries are less frequently on stems, petioles, stipules and bracts. Quantity of nectar varies greatly in different species, for example, tropical orchids of the genus Coryanthes has up to 30 g, a common lime – 0,15-7,46 mg, macrophylla – 0,5-11,54 mg, raspberries (on average) – 14 mg, clover – 0.16 mg. Honey bees and other insects of the family of the bee recycle collected nectar and pollen in honey and ambrosia. The same plants often serve as a source nectar and pollen. Some plants (poplar, birch, cherry, etc.), in addition, secrete resinous substance, from which the bees make glue – propolis.

Honey plants are classified mainly by flowering time, the nature of a harvest and habitats. By flowering time they are most often divided into four groups: early spring, spring, summer, autumn. By the nature of a harvest distinction: plants from which the bees collect only pollen, for the collection of pollen and nectar, nectariferous – giving only nectar. By habitat they are divided into: forest, fruit and parkland, meadows and pastures, farm honey plants, honey plants sown specifically for bees.

Choosing a location for an apiary it is not always possible to find such places, which have around abundance and continuous flowering of honey plants. Therefore it is necessary to organize activities to improve the food supply to fill periods without harvest or make collection stronger and more sustainable.

Usually bees collect pollen from entomophilous plants that produce and the nectar. But in some periods of the season (especially in the early spring) when the honey plants are not yet in bloom or very few of them are in bloom, bees take this food from wind-pollinated plants. The most valuable for the bees are: hazel, alder, elm, oak, birch, walnut, aspen, castor bean, lupine, maize, mullein, hemp, quinoa.

A good source of nectar and pollen is hay (dry meadows and flood). Their value is measured not only by the size of areas, but also by the composition of plants. Most valuable are meadows, which have a lot of clover (pink, white), yellow alfalfa, deervetches and other legumes.

Forest honey plants for beekeeping are crucial. In addition to tree and bush honey plants, a good source of honey are herbaceous plants for bees of burnt areas, deforestation, vacant lots and glades.

Melons and vegetables give small, but steady collection of nectar and pollen.

Locust – one of the great southern honey plants – gives ample harvest, often constituting the main honey flow.

Linden provides the highest quality honey and in many places is a major honey plant, providing ample harvest. However, lime is very sensitive to unfavorable weather conditions, especially drought, so it is unstable.

Fruit trees (plum, pear, cherry, apple) give nectar in the early spring. It promotes good development of bee colonies. Hectare orchard gives about 35-37 kg of honey.

Maples – (field, tatar, platanoides, silver) are lovely honey plants that provide up to 500 kg of honey per hectare of plantation in good conditions.

Rowan is visited weakly, but in some years it is a good help to bees in the honey harvest.

All shrubs , except for hips, are good nectariferous. Some of them give early spring harvest (golden currant and black willow, etc.), and a number of shrubs give nectar in the early and mid-summer (yellow acacia, honeysuckle). In early spring wild rose and hazelnut give pollen, as these plants do not have nectar.

Fireweed is a basic bee plant of many central and northern areas. It grows in forests, especially in clearings, abundant in burned areas. In a good weather flowers produce a lot of nectar.

Heather – late honey plant, common in the forests. Heather honey has is not suitable for feeding bees during the winter.

Phacelia is good honey plant, provides up to 150 kg of honey per hectare. It is often sown specifically for bees. Phacelia begins to bloom in 40-60 days after sowing. It can be sown at different times so the bloom can occur in a period when other plants do not bloom, and bees do not collect nectar. Phacelia is used for silage in mixture with other crops (corn) and for plowing for green manure. Blooms during a month, eagerly visited by bees. It is recommended to make wide-row crops, so Phacelia gives more nectar.

Boragegives about 200 kg of honey per hectare. It is planted specifically for bees. For one hectare you need from 6 to 8 kg of seed. It begins to bloom in a month after planting and blooms for 30 days.

Plants for bees

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